Are All Sins the Same in the Eyes of God?
We all know the Bible teaches that the wages of sin is death. That means that all sin, no matter how big or small gets us a sentence to Hell. However, does that mean God views all sin as equal in every way? The answer might be more complicated than you think.
Transcript
Warning, the following message may be offensive to some audiences.
These audiences may include but are not limited to professing Christians who never read their Bible, sissies, sodomites, men with man buns, those who approve of men with man buns, man
bun enablers, white knights for men with man buns, homemakers who have finished Netflix but don't know how to meal plan, and people who refer to their pets as fur babies.
Viewer discretion is advised.
People are tired of hearing nothing but doom and despair on the radio.
The message of Christianity is that salvation is found in Christ alone, and any who reject
Christ therefore forfeit any hope of salvation, any hope of
heaven.
The issue is that humanity is in sin, and the wrath of almighty
God is hanging over our heads.
They will hear his words, they will not act upon them, and when the floods of divine judgment, when the fires of wrath
come, they will be consumed and they will perish.
God wrapped himself in flesh, condescended and became a man,
died on the cross for sin, was resurrected on the third day, has ascended to the right
hand of the Father, where he sits now to make intercession for us.
Jesus is saying there is a group of people who will hear his words, they will act upon them, and when the floods
of divine judgment come in that final day, their house will stand.
Alright Tim, the question for today is, are all sins the same in the eyes of God?
This is one of those common Christian clichés that really don't make a lot of sense at all, but then
it's a maddening thing that people will say.
I did a few polls this last week that were asking about the severity of different
kinds of sins, and I was a little bit surprised at how many people came along and did the
sin leveling game where basically every sin is
treated as exactly equal.
Really, the Bible knows nothing of this kind of thought process, but the answer is no.
Sins are not all the same in the eyes of God.
God knows how to tell the difference between different types of sin.
Okay, I guess my mind jumps to the fact that any sin
will send someone to hell, right?
It doesn't matter what that sin is.
One sin is all it takes to fall short of the glory of God.
So it seems like from that perspective, God sees them as all the same, but then you're saying,
hey, they are different, and I think I know what you're getting at, but why don't you sort of
explain the difference and what's leading you to say, hey, no, we can read the
Bible and see plainly that God really doesn't treat all sins the same.
Yeah, well, I think there is a reality that we all enter into the world as sinners, and it's
not as if we're condemned the moment we sin one time.
So we enter into the world, we have inherited the guilt of our father Adam's sin,
and then that's going to naturally lead that all of us do sin.
So for as one man, sin entered into the world, and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because of all of sin.
So we enter into the world sinful, we inherit the guilt of Adam's sin, and
then we have this contagion that's attached to us.
It's going to mean that necessarily we all end up acting it out in one way or another.
So sin is all equal in that it's missing the mark
of God's holiness.
And there's a sense in which God's holiness is infinite, and so even the smallest sin,
when you contrast that to the holiness of an infinite God, is a grievous offense,
right?
Yeah.
So that's obviously true, and it's all evidence of our condemned state.
Even white lies, respectable sin, whatever, but that doesn't mean that God can't tell the difference
between different types of sin, and that all sin are fundamentally the same.
And that doesn't mean that human beings should pretend as if all sin are the same either.
And all it takes is just to use any human example that you can think of to
demonstrate the point.
So you'd much rather one of your children say
something mean to you than stab your wife to death in her sleep, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think most normal people would probably prefer the first one.
But then if you want to pretend like those things are the same to God even,
then what you would say is that that anger that caused the
rude remark from one of your kids, that God would institute the death penalty for that.
But then the issue is that, as you read through the Old Testament, one of the things you're going to find is God does make certain sins
capital offenses, and not every sin is a capital offense.
So that means that God has some way of weighing the nature of specific sins,
meaning it's not death penalty here and now for any sin, but some sins are
death penalty kind of sins.
Could you imagine if it was the death penalty for every single type of sin?
Well, to the social justice warriors, they would wish it was for specific sins that they
are particularly offended by.
So whenever you... I mean, they would put you to death if you say something they dislike or deem to be racist or offensive in any way,
for sure.
But then you have to have some level of proportion.
In order to operate as a society, you have to have some way of
keeping these things in some sort of perspective.
And God is not unable to do the same kind of thing in terms of his own mind.
So, I mean, just think about Judas, for instance.
So Jesus says of Judas that it would have been better that Judas were never born.
Right.
Of Sodom and Gomorrah, he says that, you know, of Jerusalem, it would be more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah than for Jerusalem
because they had received more revelation and they're guiltier.
So, you know, in this life, God gives harsher penalties for certain sins than others.
And then in the next life, God gives harsher penalties for certain sins than others.
So that tells me that God is able to distinguish between different types of sin.
Okay?
So are you talking about some sort of Dante's Inferno?
That would be levels of hell.
So the Dante's Inferno kind of scheme is levels of hell.
And the Bible doesn't teach different levels of hell like Judas and then,
who is it?
Brutus or whatever that is.
I can't remember the three who were in the bottom rung of hell, but, you know, there's not levels of hell in that way, but there's
different degrees of severity in hell even based on the amount of rejection
of God that we do in this life.
And there will be rewards, different rewards in heaven for the amount of faithfulness in this life as
well.
So God's able to distinguish these things both ways.
So now, there's a type of person then that uses the fact that, okay,
like lust, for instance, Jesus equates lust with adultery.
It's the kind of person who says, well, I guess lust is fine because it's not nearly as bad as adultery.
And then you have a lot of people who come along and essentially with that kind of way of thinking about it and say, well, that's repugnant
to a biblical worldview.
And absolutely, that's repugnant.
You should never treat sin like that.
You should never compare certain sins to others in such a way that you're going to
say, well, this one is really bad, and then the ones that I'm committing are not very bad at all.
Therefore, I can keep on doing it because they're not really a big deal.
That would be a wrong way of avoiding the problem
of sin leveling in that way to where that's a way of making comparisons
to produce more iniquity.
Yeah, you're basically like the guy saying, God, thank you for not making me like this tax collector.
Right, right, right.
So that's a very bad impulse.
But then practically, we do have to have some way of distinguishing these things in terms
of how we build a government.
We have to do this in relating to other people as well.
So there's certain sins that you can commit against your marriage that God says are
appropriate reasons to get a divorce.
But then same thing with your parenting.
Imagine if the smallest, most minor infraction that your kid
makes, you treat everything as just the worst possible
offense ever.
So you slightly raise your voice in the house.
It's like, that's a spanking offense.
You have to figure out what you're doing.
I'll be honest.
There are certain things that my
daughter will do that I just think to myself, I've got to
pick my battles.
I might just let this one go because I know that there's four others that I've already
got to deal with.
So you have to have some way of prioritizing these kind of things in the here and now.
So with kids, one of the things that we've always done is if they lie to us, that's a really big deal because we know that if they learn
to lie well, they can get away with anything.
So we treat lying very seriously.
And there's other things that we, I mean, it's not as if we're not treating them the same level of, it's not as if we're not treating them seriously,
it's just they're not like that.
Now, you deal with everything, but then you have to have some sense of proportion.
I mean, imagine if you're a boss and literally anything your employee does wrong, you fire them,
right?
Right.
It's like, well...
That'd be a tough job.
That'd be a tough job.
I mean, it'd be nerve -wracking, right?
And do you even hold yourself to that same standard?
Yeah, I mean, so I think you do need to have, in any relationship scheme, you need to have some
ability to say, this is worse than this, and this is worse than that.
And how do we, like in a level of severity, and this is part of the thing that evangelicals
are not able to do with the same -sex attraction kind of stuff at this point, is that they basically are treating,
they don't have any category for saying that sodomy and transgenderism and all this stuff are,
they reflect a different degree of depravity than other things, and so we have to treat everything as if it's just
normal levels of depravity.
And it's just like, then you end up with drag queen story hours at your library kind of thing, you know?
You find yourself missing the old days when you just had to deal with these other certain
specific sins that weren't as bad.
Right, right, right.
And so, no, I mean, what people do, like if they're going to make a biblical case for it, they'll say, hey, but isn't, like
you compare something like lust and adultery, right?
And they'll say, well, doesn't Jesus say that lust and adultery are essentially the same thing, right?
So you look at a woman with lust, and you've committed adultery with her in your heart, and then the same thing with anger, right?
Isn't anger essentially heart murder?
So you think you're okay because you didn't murder someone?
Well, if you're angry with your brother, like that's the same kind of thing.
And I think, you know, one thing that's happening there is there's just a profound misunderstanding of Jesus's
point, okay?
Okay.
So Jesus's point is not just to say, you know, if you lust after someone, you might as well go ahead and go all the way and commit
physical adultery.
This is all the same.
Like, who can tell the difference?
Like, literally, no one can tell the difference.
It's like, no, that's not the point, right?
The point is there's a type of person who didn't go all the way with it and thinks
that they're justified before their maker because they somehow stopped short of the physical act.
But Jesus is saying, you think that you're okay?
You have lust in your heart?
You have the seeds of the same sin there that this person you think is so bad has,
right?
You just didn't go as far with it, right?
Yeah, he's basically just teaching against the, you know, the people who would say, hey, desire's not
sin.
Right, right.
Yeah, so just, you're a hypocrite, right?
This is the same thing that you're doing.
It's just to a minor, like a more, like it hasn't gone as far, right?
A lesser degree, yeah.
Yeah, so what you want to do is just think about, like now, the thing is, like in the old covenant, adultery was a death
penalty issue, but you don't need to kill someone, like do a death penalty for someone who engages
in heart adultery, right?
Why?
Well, because they're not the same, okay?
Like they're the same.
How do you even prove that?
Yeah, you can't prove it, but it's not the same level of seriousness.
It's the same way, like you don't want to, someone, if you murder someone, you get the death penalty, but if you have an angry thought of it, you don't
put them to death because it's not the same level of seriousness.
So what you do is, like if you treat, like what you think about is, if you want to understand Jesus' point, like adultery,
you would think about adultery like as a fire that has consumed your house, right?
Mm -hmm.
And then lust is like a, you know, it's a,
depending on what we're talking about, it can be a bigger fire or a smaller fire that is leading up to the house.
Does that make sense?
Mm -hmm.
They're both a fire, but one is more serious than the other.
Does that make sense?
Okay.
And if you don't put it out, the point is it's going to grow and it's going to consume the house.
Right.
Right?
So both of them are sinful.
Both of them are wrong, but you would much rather stop that fire before it burns the whole
house down.
Mm -hmm.
Because once it burns the whole house down, that's a much bigger problem.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
So you have the same problem that is different degrees.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
So is it fair to say that, you know, in the eyes of God, sin is,
I guess it's like the same in terms, in the eyes of God, all sin is the same
in terms of where it's going to get you.
Right?
Yeah.
It's all the same in that it sufficiently proves you're condemned.
Yeah.
Like you're guilty.
Yeah.
It establishes that.
But then,.
So it establishes we're guilty, but then it doesn't necessarily establish
just on its own the fact that you've sinned.
How guilty?
Right?
Well, you're fundamentally guilty, but you could be, like they're just, I guess the way I think about it is God gives different
punishments for different, you know.
Right. Yeah.
So if in the next life, it'll be worse for, you know, Jerusalem than it will be for
Sodom, then that tells you that he's treating the level of high -handed sin that
Jerusalem engaged in as more serious than Sodom, but they both get you to the same place.
Do you get what I'm saying?
Yeah.
And Jesus taught, you know, I think it's the apostles, they asked Jesus, hey, why are you teaching in parables?
And Jesus basically says to,.
You know,.
Basically to not increase the guilt.
Right.
To blind them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's the thing that they might see as an act of judgment on them.
So like the issue, the issue is, yes, Jesus is able to tell the difference between lust and
adultery and between anger and murder.
But what he's trying to say is, I guess the same, like, you know, you're not okay if you stop short of the act.
Sin happens way before that.
And, you know, if you're the type of person who says, well, you know, lust is a smaller fire than adultery, the big fire,
therefore I'm going to let it go.
It's like, yeah, your house is going to get burned down.
Like, okay.
Okay, weirdo.
I don't know anyone else who's all right with fires burning in their house.
Right. Yeah.
You know, a small fire is a fire too.
Right.
But then like, you know, that all.
So,.
So the issue is God can tell the difference.
We can tell the difference,.
But,.
You know, none of us are righteous.
No,.
Not one in any.
What we need to do is treat the smaller stuff much more seriously than what we do and stop it
quicker.
Right.
Like,.
That's just the point.
Stop it quicker.
I don't just let, let it burn the house down before you stop it.
Or before you wake up, treat it seriously and know that like, you need forgiveness of all of it, you know, more than what
you think, not just the big stuff, the small stuff,.
Right.
You need forgiveness for all of it.
But then, you know, living in the world that we live in and the way that God operates the way we operate should
be that we should be able to make certain distinctions between these things.
And it shouldn't be that complicated.
Okay.
Fair enough.
This has been another episode of Bible Bashed.
We hope you have been encouraged and blessed through our discussion.
We thank you for all your support and ask you to continue to like and subscribe to Bible Bashed and share our podcast
with your friends and on social media.
Please reach out to us with your questions, pushback and potential topics for us to discuss in future episodes
at BibleBashedPodcast at gmail .com and consider supporting us through Patreon.
If you would like to be Bible Bashed personally, then please know that we also offer free biblical counseling which you can
take advantage of by emailing us.
Now,.
Go boldly and obey the truth in the midst of a biblically illiterate world who will be perpetually offended
by your every move.